- Walter Cowan
Admiral Sir Walter Henry Cowan, 1st Baronet, KCB, DSO*, MVO (
11 June 1871 –14 February 1956 ), known as Tich Cowan, was a BritishRoyal Navy admiral who saw service in bothWorld War I andWorld War II ; in the latter he was one of the oldest British servicemen on active duty.Early days
Cowan was born in
Crickhowell ,Brecknockshire , the son of an officer in theRoyal Welch Fusiliers . After his father's retirement from the Army, the family settled inAlveston, Warwickshire , where his father became ajustice of the peace .Cowan never went to school, but entered the Royal Navy in 1884 at the training ship, HMS "Britannia", a classmate to fellow future admiral David Beatty.
Early service
In 1886, as Midshipmen, Cowan and Beatty joined HMS "Alexandra",
flagship of the Mediterranean Fleet. Cowan fell sick and was invalided home after less than a year, but later rejoined the "Alexandra", returning with her to Britain in 1889. He then joined HMS "Volage" in the Training Squadron and was commissioned as aSub-Lieutenant in 1890. He was appointed to HMS "Boadicea", flagship of theEast India Station . In 1892 he was promotedLieutenant and becameFirst Lieutenant of thegunboat HMS "Redbreast". However, in 1893 he was invalided home withdysentery .In 1894 he was appointed to the
light cruiser HMS "Barrosa" offWest Africa . During this time he participated in a number of expeditions against native and Arab insurgents.In 1898, he was appointed to the
destroyer HMS "Boxer" in the Mediterranean, but only stayed in her for six months before being given command of theNile gunboat HMS "Sultan". He took part in the Battles of Atbara and Omdurman and then commanded the entire Nile gunboat flotilla during theFashoda Incident . He received theDistinguished Service Order (DSO) for these actions.Cowan then particiated in the
Second Boer War , acting asaide-de-camp to Lord Kitchener and then to Lord Roberts.Returning to England in 1901, he was appointed First Lieutenant of the
battleship HMS "Prince George". In June 1901 he was promotedCommander at the early age of thirty. He later took command of the destroyer HMS "Falcon" and acted as second-in-command of the Devonport destroyer flotilla underRoger Keyes , who was then developing new destroyer tactics. They became fast friends. Cowan commanded several more destroyers, acquiring a widespread reputation as a destroyer captain, and then succeeded Keyes in command of the flotilla. In 1904 he was appointed Member of the Royal Victorian Order (MVO). In 1905 he took command of HMS "Skirmisher" and he was promotedCaptain in 1906. He transferred to thecruiser HMS "Sapphire" in 1907 and in 1908 took command of all destroyers of theChannel Fleet . In 1909 he transferred to theReserve Fleet and in 1910 he became captain of the new light cruiser HMS "Gloucester".In 1912 he became chief of staff to
John de Robeck , who was then Flag Officer Patrols.World War I
In 1914, shortly before the outbreak of the
First World War , he was given command of the 18,500 tonbattlecruiser HMS "New Zealand". Six months later he took over the 26,270 ton HMS "Princess Royal" asflag captain toOsmond Brock . He commanded her at theBattle of Jutland , where she was badly damaged. He was appointed Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in 1916.The Baltic
In June 1917 Cowan was made Commodore of the
1st Light Cruiser Squadron . In 1918 he was promotedRear-Admiral , staying in command of the squadron. In January 1919 the squadron was sent to the Baltic. The squadron kept the sea lanes open to the newly independentEstonia andLatvia , enabling them to secure their freedom. During the course of this campaign, coastaltorpedo boat s attached to Cowan's command sank twoBolshevik battleships and one cruiser atKronstadt naval base. Augustus Agar received theVictoria Cross for his part in these events.Andrew Browne Cunningham , later Britain's leadingWorld War II admiral, commanded Cowan's destroyers in this campaign. Cowan's forceful diplomacy ensured a successful mission, for which he was promoted to Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in 1919 and created aBaronet , "of the Baltic", in the 1921 New Year Honours.Between the Wars
In 1921, Cowan was appointed to command the
Battlecruiser Squadron , flying his flag in HMS "Hood". He was unemployed from 1923 to 1925, although he was promotedVice-Admiral in 1923. In 1925 he was appointed to commandScotland and in 1926 to America and theWest Indies , holding the command until 1928. He was promotedAdmiral in 1927. His final appointment was asFirst and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp to the King in 1930. He retired in 1931.Oldest warrior
During World War II he was given a job by his old friend Roger Keyes, then head of the Commandos. Cowan voluntarily took the lower rank of
Commander and went to Scotland in 1941 to train the commandos in small boat handling. He served in North Africa, where he saw action atMechili and at theBattle of Bir Hakeim , where he was captured on27 May 1942 , having attached himself to the Indian18th King Edward VII's Own Cavalry (his commando unit having been disbanded). He was fighting an Italiantank crew single-handedly armed only with arevolver . Repatriated in 1943, he rejoined the commandos and saw action inItaly during 1944. He was awarded a bar to his DSO. He retired once more in 1945.Tribute
In 2007 the
Estonian Navy named a British-made minehunter of the "Sandown" class the "Admiral Cowan". [ [http://web-static.vm.ee/static/failid/021/ER_39.pdf Estonian Review ] ]Footnotes
References
*Biography, "
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
*"Cowan's War, The British Naval Action in the Baltic in 1919" byGeoffrey Bennett (1964). Republished in 2002 as "Freeing the Baltic". ISBN-10: 184341001X
*"Sound of the guns, being an account of the wars and service of Admiral Sir Walter Cowan" by Lionel George Dawson, (Pen-in-hand, Oxford, 1949)External links
* [http://www.hmshood.com/crew/biography/cowan_bio.htm HMS Hood Association biography]
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